Amid the conflict in Yemen, mass campaigns to end the threat of tropical diseases continue

Amid the conflict in Yemen, mass campaigns to end the threat of tropical diseases continue14 December 2021 –- Schistosomiasis and soil-transmitted helminths are neglected tropical diseases (NTDs), but these parasitic worm infections can lead to anaemia, malnutrition, and learning difficulties among children. Left untreated, schistosomiasis can damage the liver, intestines, bladder, spleen and lungs, while soil-transmitted helminths can cause a range of problems, including slow physical and mental development.

Public health authorities have battled for more than a decade to tackle schistosomiasis, supported by partners such as the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) and World Health Organization (WHO). In 2010, one in five residents in Yemen is at risk of contracting schistosomiasis, better known as bilharzia. Today, this figure has dropped to fewer than one in 15 (about three million people). Although limited data exist  on the soil-transmitted helminths that affect communities across the country, bringing these infections under control is another public health goal.

Eliminating schistosomiasis involves the mass administration of drugs, with members of a target population being treated once a year. Several rounds of drugs are administered over several years to get rid of a community of the parasite. The Emergency Health and Nutrition Project (EHNP) funded by IDA, the World Bank’s fund for poorest countries, has helped to eliminate schistosomiasis as a public health problem in Yemen.

“Nothing beats a child’s smile. This project represents a critical opportunity to decrease the disease burden among vulnerable Yemenis, particularly children. The project is part of the World Bank’s strategy to invest in Yemen’s most important assets: its people,” said Tania Meyer, World Bank Country Manager for Yemen.

During a recent four-day mass campaign, almost 860 000 children and adolescents between six and 19 years of age, were targeted (whether enrolled in school or not) across seven southern and eastern governorates: Abyan, Hadramout/Mukalla, Hadramout/Sayoun, Lahj, Mareb, Shabwa, and Taiz. In total, 37 districts, 373 team leaders, 1070 team supervisors, and 2140 drug distributors were involved and over 80% of the target population reached.

Yemen is making progress against other neglected tropical diseases as well. Lymphatic filariasis, which causes swelling of limbs and is spread by infected mosquitos, was eliminated as a public health problem in 2019. The administrative certification of the elimination of leprosy in Yemen is underway, and technical teams are working hard to eliminate blindness of infectious origins: trachoma by 2024, and onchocerciasis, or river blindness, by 2030.

This progress is encouraging, and a sign that the elimination of schistosomiasis as a public health problem may be within reach in Yemen in the next five years“This progress is encouraging, and a sign that the elimination of schistosomiasis as a public health problem may be within reach in Yemen in the next five years,” said Dr Adham Rashad Ismail Abdel-Moneim, WHO’s Yemen Representative. “Reaching it, however, will depend on continued support from partners.”

The campaign was carried out in close collaboration with Yemen’s Ministry of Education and the Health Education Centre, which is part of the Ministry of Public Health and Population. Technical and statistical local plans were prepared, a training of trainers’ session carried out, and workshops given to drug distributors and the heads of teams in charge of both fixed and mobile treatment facilities. A third-party team conducted direct monitoring of the activities and interviews with around 4000 people across 1000 randomly selected households.

The campaign in January 2021 targeted 2.4 million people at 3300 sites across 32 districts in seven northern governorates, involving 6700 drug distributors. Approximately, 4.8 million praziquantel tablets and 2.4 million albendazole tablets were distributed.

More mass campaigns against soil-transmitted helminths and schistosomiasis are planned for 2022, with more investment made to improve community engagement in order to reach more than 80% of the targeted population in the future.

Related link

The Enemy Within: Tackling Schistosomiasis in Yemen, World Bank, 7 April 2014

The Emergency Health and Nutrition Project , WHO Yemen